Only
campaigns with money problems or that are losing cancel ads in swing
states weeks before election day. A presidential campaign that wants
to win doesn’t do this. The ad cancellations in all three states
are extremely odd because Trump is running within 5 points of Hillary
Clinton in each of them.

While
polling shows Clinton with small leads in North Carolina, and a
roughly 5 point lead in Florida, Ohio looks like a dead heat toss up.

Donald
Trump is losing in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Colorado, Wisconsin, and
Virginia by larger margins than the states where his campaign
canceled the ads.

The
move to run less advertising makes no sense and suggests a campaign
that is in even deeper trouble than is being publicly reported.

It
is impossible to escape the conclusion that Donald Trump’s campaign
is in a state of utter chaos and collapse.

The
Republican Party appears to be in a tailspin since Trump’s hot mic
bombshell dropped. Projects for Trump’s “victory” program have
been put on indefinite hold and members of the party are jumping ship
faster than you can say… what Donald did on tape.

While
Trump is still technically the official party nominee, The Donald is
under mounting pressure from a growing number of leading Republicans
to step aside, less than 24 hours after a 2005 tape of him bragging
about sexually assaulting women was leaked.

Jason
Chaffetz was the first sitting Republican member of Congress to
publicly pull his support of Trump, citing his 15-year-old daughter
as the reason he could no longer endorse the candidate for president.

Senator
John McCain has pulled his support for Trump, saying there were “no
excuses for Donald Trump’s offensive behavior.”

RNC
chairman Reince Priebus and speaker of the house Paul Ryan continued
the wave of “sickened” GOPers to denounce Trump by disinviting
him to their joint political event in Wisconsin on Saturday.

GOP
senators Mike Lee, Kelly Ayotte, Mark Kirk, John Thune, Mike Crapo,
Cory Gardner, Martha Roby, Jeff Flake, Dennis Daugaard and Rob
Portman all took to social media to not only criticize Trump’s
comments, but to call for the candidate to drop out:

Kasich,
Rubio and Cruz were all quick off the mark to lambast their former
rival:

Sensing
the panic, the RNC have put a “hold on all projects” related to
the Trump’s “Victory” program according to an email seen by
Politico: “Please put a hold/stop on all mail projects right now.
If something is in production or print it needs to stop. Will update
you when to proceed,” it read.

Never
one to back to down, Trump remains defiant:

However,
some Republicans chose to openly support Trump, saying that the
11-year-old “locker room” comments can’t be compared with the
prospect of Hillary Clinton becoming president amid the “dire”
economic situation in the country.

Sarah
Palin has called out mainstream media for “hypocrisy,” saying
that Clinton’s outrageous comments and details of leaks have not
been as much spun in the press.

“Going
around media filters you clearly see one candidate offering a bold
vision with solid plans to build a stronger, safer, greater America,
while the career politician in the race offers only tired, sad,
unsustainable, illogical ways of the past that will leave our
children unsafe, broken and abused,” Palin insisted on her Facebook
page.

For
what it’s worth, potential VP Mike Pence is, while disappointed,
choosing to stick by his running mate and Melania Trump thinks one
should forgive her husband, as has she.

This
all comes exactly one month before Election Day.John McCain Endorses Hillary Clinton - Withdraws Support for Trump